It’s that time! The school year is beginning and you’re ready to welcome up to 180 new learners into your classroom. Whether you’re in your first year of teaching or your thirty-fifth, the first day of school can bring both excitement and trepidation.
And if you’re welcoming new emergent bilingual learners to your classroom, there are distinct challenges that come with these adolescents who may speak a home language other than school English.
They may speak Spanish or Chinese, Vietnamese or Arabic, Russian or Haitian Creole, African American Vernacular, or Chicano English, but one thing is for certain: you need strategies to welcome them into your classroom and create an inclusive learning environment. Strategies that set them up for academic success.
Here are my top seven tips and strategies for creating that middle school space:
This shows that you care about who they are, their culture, and their heritage.
Your final product should be prominently displayed to serve as a reminder of the inclusive culture of the classroom.
If you struggle to learn or speak a second language, imagine the processes that take place when you do it all the time!
There may be a single word in their home language that requires a paragraph in English. Use these opportunities to expand all learners' cultural and linguistic connections.
Ask your emergent bilingual learners for help. This promotes inclusivity and makes them feel safer and more welcome.
Allow them to support each other. This fosters a sense of community and allows students to learn from their peers.
The teaching supports and ancillaries you’ll find in Connections will support you in that.
All these strategies support emergent bilingual learners, while doing no harm to your English-only learners. They create empathy and awareness and may even encourage your English-only learners to learn a second language.
Dr. Almitra L. Berry is an educational consultant, author, and podcaster. She contributed to the review of emergent bilingual supports in Connections: English Language Arts. Dr. Berry covers the topic of emergent bilingual learners extensively in her book Effecting Change for Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Learners and in several episodes of the Educational Equity Emancipation podcast.